Stirlingsays
Member
- Country
England
Vinyl is making a comeback.
So is herpes.
England
Vinyl is making a comeback.
England
England
Just listening to a jazz cd I picked up this week for 33p. Fourth time I’ve given it a playing. Now that’s value.
USA
England
Scotland
Or he was a cheapskate.so you think Charity shops are beneath you ?
Ingvar Kamprad was the billionaire who founded Ikea. Worth 23 billion dollars. He was famously a miser and an unashamed alcoholic. Lived to 91. He drove a battered old Volvo and wore clothing from charity shops.
the fecker was loaded, so i guess he knew a few things more than the rest of us.
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Ingvar Kamprad - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
England
That’s a fish isn’t it?Or he was a cheapskate.
Scotland
You wouldn't buy one in a charity shop anyway.That’s a fish isn’t it?
England
Oh I don’t know.You wouldn't buy one in a charity shop anyway.
Scotland
Once bitten. Twice shy.Oh I don’t know.
England
USA
i joked that an A3 print of Picasso's Guernika was an original. Probably worth millions. The old geezer, working behind the counter, went into an apoplexy. Running around telling the other 3 or 4 ladies in the backroom.About 3 years ago my son bought a framed picture from a charity shop for 15 quid because he liked the picture.
When he was walking home with it, a woman said to him 'oh, that's a Beryl Cooke'
After some googling, a month later he sold it for a couple of grand.
Jammy git !
England
England
I used to manage a charity warehouse taking in donations from household collections which then would be sorted on site before delivering to the charity’s shops around the country. Very little did not result in an income stream, if not at the shops then sold in bulk to middle men (scrap metal per ton, mixed rag baled and sold to recycling companies). The point is that these days most donations go direct to the shop from the public with a higher rate of resulting rubbish.I did a stint as volunteer in a charity a few years ago, very interesting and a bit of an eye-opener all round.
I'm not the most patient type and my only experience of retail is when I worked briefly in a greengrocer as a teenager many moons ago. The point I'm getting to is that the customer can be a real pain in the backside, and so I had to learn patience...
Also, the charity shop is often used as a dumping ground for the public who "donate" all kinds of crap, often sneakily bagged up in black bin liners - "There's some lovely stuff in there" is a catchphrase I quickly became alerted to, usually such donations had dirty and moth eaten clothing that the lazy feckers couldn't be bothered to take to the dump. A lot of stuff is totally unsellable and has to be disposed of appropriately.
Volunteers don't get paid and the paid staff get paid peanuts, so charity shop workers do have first dibs, which is fair enough.
England
Ireland
I bought the TDK kit in a charity shop. No doubt, someone was fed up with it.Some stuff donated is passed on - from memory Oxfam had a shop solely selling wedding dresses. Yet to hear of a shop that sells unwanted palace tops (children do grow).
Expect that there are some clubs with shirts that would require the shops to say "we will give you £5.00 to take that shirt away".
Wales
I used to see a few obscure Palace shirts in the charity shops around Penge. They seemed to be glued to the rails, as no one ever bought themI bought the TDK kit in a charity shop. No doubt, someone was fed up with it.